Calgary airport is at like 4000 ft elevation? If your numbers are referenced for sealevel, yur gonna be shy of the 400/400. and you may need more than 10.25 Scr. Your stall is gonna depend a great deal on your final Cylinder pressure. AND if a 230*/110 cam, 3.23s are NOT gonna cut it.
With a 223*/110 cam maybe, but at 4000ft I wouldn't run a 110 Lsa.
So the question is;
what elevation are you gonna be running at ?
And if at multiple elevations I highly recommend alloy heads, and punch the pressure up to as high as you dare, at the lowest elevation. I have run as high as 195psi still on 87E10. But my current cam is at ~185psi
If you don't keep the Cylinder Pressure up, you are gonna be forced to run more gear and a higher stall, just to get off the line with reasonable aplomb.
If you desire to keep the 3.23s and a stockish stall, you are gonna need to run the pressure up. Currently at 10.25 and say an Ica of 64*, your pressure at 4000ft is gonna be around 148psi, and your 5.9 is gonna feel like a 5.2, outta the gate. In an A-body and an A904, and a 2000 stall that should spin the tires, but not for long.
So, you got a choice;
Put some 3.73s or better back there, and a 3000 stall,
Or
install some small closed chamber alloy heads and get the Scr up to something like 11.5, with the next smaller cam, with an Ica of say 61. That is gonna get you pressure up to around 180, and now, your engine is gonna feel like mine. This will run the 3.23s no problem, and whatever stall you got.
so then, it's a dollars comparison, but I guarantee you that you'll never be sorry at 180psi.
The thing is, even if you did have 400/400;
top of First gear with 3.23s is about 6000=55mph. On the shift, the Rs will fall to 59%, say 3500, and yur 400/400 combo at 148psi /4000 ft elevation is sucking wind. Right there is where the 180 psi, smaller cam is gonna pick yur combo up out of the basement and send it. So you'll be trading some power at 6000 where you don't need it, for some power at 3500 where you are desperate for it, right?
Bottom line, if you are at 4000 ft, IMO, you gotta think pressure.